Schwarz
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slatington pa church conversion $210k
east allen stone farm house 11 acres $325k
fountain hill brick 5 br $113k
get carports
yellowed fiberglass
reading pa 4 family row house $109.5K
3,326 square foot, built in 1858.
wood-fired barrel oven
via shelter pub
One Last Walk Across the Joe Ratcliff Pedestrian Walkway Before Its Upcoming Demolition
(formerly known as the Templeton Trail Bridge)
toss-up
via 8ball fb
rusty gold
pair ECK FOLLEN
Walnut and milk paint benchs
pair modern adirondack chairs
discovery sept 1 rago
steel and wood fabricated chair
via sister slab
96" antique windmill fan in 6 parts
via vz / yes you can make one of these yourself!!!
studio craftsman low bench est $800 - $1200 @ rago
american gate-leg dropleaf walnut table late 18th c. est $500 - $700
rip jerry leiber
rip nick ashford
maya blue
skate goofy foot, skate long boards
Oil, Acrylic, and Alkyd grounds for Oil painting
Small Eco Houses: Solar Home on the Oregon Coast
325sf / scroll down for slide show / via shelter pub fb
the alligator cafe
tropicana havana
Despite all of these remarks (and others that I don't have room for here), Rick Perry is responsible for Texas being the second biggest state recipient of ARRA stimulus dollars -- ostensibly "redistributed" from tax payers in Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York and the president's home state of Hawaii.
In 2010, Perry was confronting a state budget deficit of $6.6 billion. A constitutional amendment mandated that Perry balance the budget somehow, but instead of using a "rainy day" fund established with state money, Perry decided to tap a different source to fill the void. The stimulus. According to Politifact, Perry and the Republican-controlled Texas legislature requested, received and used $6.4 billion in stimulus money to help balance the budget. 97 percent of the budget shortfall was filled with stimulus money.
There's more.
In addition to the $6.4 billion to balance Rick Perry's budget deficits, Texas also used $5.7 billion in stimulus money in 2010 for "programs such as highway and bridge construction, child care development programs and weatherization assistance."
That's a total of $12,100,000,000 in total stimulus money for Rick Perry's Texas in one year alone. Nearly seven percent of the total Texas budget in 2010 was stimulus money. That's a lot of "principle" being "tossed out the window." If Perry had, in fact, seceded, I wonder where that money would have come from. It stands to reason that a military confrontation with the United States would have created massive, unprecedented deficits in Texas.
As of the end of June this year, Texas asked for and accepted $17.4 billion in stimulus money with Rick Perry presiding over the state.
[...]
This is should be the argument against Rick Perry and the Republicans. They're closeted Keynesians. Using their own vernacular, they're socialists, and they're lying to everyone about their hypocritical true nature almost every time they fire-eat in public against the scary "misguided" generational theft being perpetrated by the White House and the Democrats. On a personal level, Rick Perry has even accepted more than $80,000 in federal farm subsidies while positioning himself as the viable tea party candidate running to be chief executive of a nation from which he wanted to secede because of "runaway spending." The contradictions are staggering.